IORC v. Labrador

  • Filed: March 27, 2025
  • Status: Active
  • Court: U.S. District Court for the District of Idaho
  • Latest Update: Nov 25, 2025
A group of eight advocates hold signs in support of immigrants standing in front of the federal court building in boise, idaho.

IORC v. Labrador was filed in 2025 to stop the Idaho legislature from circumventing federal immigration enforcement.

Recent Update: As of April 2025, a federal judge granted a class-wide preliminary injunction in IORC v. Labrador, blocking enforcement of House Bill 83's entry and reentry crimes statewide until the litigation is resolved.

About This Lawsuit

During the 2025 legislative session, Idaho lawmakers introduced a slate of anti-immigrant bills, including House Bill 83 (H.B. 83).

H.B. 83 introduced new state-level immigration offenses and enforcement mechanisms in Idaho. In particular, it criminalizes (1) entering the state without lawful immigration status and (2) being present in the state if you were previously subject to deportation or removal proceedings. The legislation is modeled after a 2023 Texas law, Senate Bill 4, which has been blocked by the courts. These laws are a national trend harming immigrant communities.

Hours after the bill’s enactment on March 27, 2025, a federal judge blocked H.B. 83 from going into effect in response to the ACLU of Idaho filing a lawsuit against the state—in partnership with attorneys at the national ACLU Immigrants' Rights Project. In our lawsuit, we argue that H.B. 83 violates the U.S. Constitution by attempting to supersede the federal government’s oversight of immigration enforcement, by impermissibly limiting interstate commerce, and by failing to give ordinary people fair notice of what conduct it proscribes.

Case Number:
1:25-cv-00178-AKB
Judge:
Judge Amanda K. Brailsford
Attorney(s):
Paul Carlos Southwick and Emily Myrei Croston of ACLU of Idaho / Cody Wofsy, Spencer Amdur, Hannah Steinberg, Oscar Sarabia Roman, Omar Jadwat, and Grace Choi of ACLU Immigrants' Rights Project

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